Operating systems are all going to support direct input of Unicode
characters by number. The ISO standard method is Shift-Ctrl-222E for
character 222E.
People who put hard-to-recognize characters onto their business cards
are going to add a line giving the Unicode numbers, perhaps in boxes:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (with a contour-integral sign)
+----+
postmaster@|222E|.cr.yp.to (in smaller type)
+----+
The second line won't distract the people in the intended audience who
recognize the contour-integral sign and have, say, Alt-S configured to
produce it.
End of problem. Notice that this doesn't require any extra DNS names.
The conversion of Shift-Ctrl-222E to \342\210\256 is isolated inside the
keyboard interface; other software doesn't have to worry about it.
---Dan
Re: [idn] The Business Card problem (was: Re: An experiment with UTF-8 domain names)
D. J. Bernstein c/o James Seng Sun, 07 Jan 2001 12:53:14 -0800
- [idn] The Business Card problem (was: Re: A... John C Klensin
- Re: [idn] The Business Card problem (w... Brian W. Spolarich
- Re: [idn] The Business Card proble... Adam M. Costello
- Re: [idn] The Business Card problem (w... D. J. Bernstein c/o James Seng
- Re: [idn] The Business Card proble... Paul Hoffman / IMC
- Re: [idn] The Business Card problem (w... Martin J. Duerst
- Re: [idn] The Business Card proble... John C Klensin
- Re: [idn] The Business Card problem (w... GIM Gyeongseog-KIM Kyongsok
- Re: [idn] The Business Card proble... John C Klensin
- Re: [idn] The Business Card pr... GIM Gyeongseog-KIM Kyongsok
- Re: [idn] The Business Car... John C Klensin
- RE: [idn] The Busines... Brian W. Spolarich
- Re: [idn] The Business Card proble... John C Klensin
- Re: [idn] The Business Card pr... GIM Gyeongseog-KIM Kyongsok
